4.8 Article

Mechanism for antigenic peptide selection by endoplasmic reticulum aminopeptidase 1

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1912070116

Keywords

enzyme; mechanism; peptide; X-ray crystallography; immune system

Funding

  1. Harry J. Lloyd Charitable Trust
  2. project National Centre for Scientific Research Demokritos-Institute of Nuclear & Radiological Sciences and Technology, Energy & Safety Research Activities in the Framework of the National RIS3 [MIS 5002559]
  3. Operational Program Competitiveness, Entrepreneurship and Innovation [NSRF 2014-2020]
  4. European Union (European Regional Development Fund)
  5. General Secretariat for Research and Technology
  6. Hellenic Foundation for Research and Innovation [303]
  7. project INSPIREDThe National Research Infrastructures on Integrated Structural Biology, Drug Screening Efforts and Drug Target Functional Characterization [MIS 5002550]
  8. Horizon 2020 Program of the European Union [653706, 5589]
  9. European Molecular Biology Laboratory-Hamburg [MX-619]

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Endoplasmic reticulum aminopeptidase 1 (ERAP1) is an intracellular enzyme that optimizes the peptide cargo of major histocompatibility class I (MHC-I) molecules and regulates adaptive immunity. It has unusual substrate selectivity for length and sequence, resulting in poorly understood effects on the cellular immunopeptidome. To understand substrate selection by ERAP1, we solved 2 crystal structures of the enzyme with bound transition-state pseudopeptide analogs at 1.68 angstrom and 1.72 angstrom. Both peptides have their N terminus bound at the active site and extend away along a large internal cavity, interacting with shallow pockets that can influence selectivity. The longer peptide is disordered through the central region of the cavity and has its C terminus bound in an allosteric pocket of domain IV that features a carboxypeptidase-like structural motif. These structures, along with enzymatic and computational analyses, explain how ERAP1 can select peptides based on length while retaining the broad sequence-specificity necessary for its biological function.

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